your drivers look fineYour mids also look finePutters is where you get a bit crowded. You could easily get a Medium Ion and drive and approach with it and drop the Wizard and Banger-GT. You could also try the Opto Pure in place of the Anode(it may change your life.)

Well depending on what you want to do you could pull the Wraith out of the closet and use it for wide open distance and lower line shots. It's a good disc.

I personally like Eagles and you could technically replace your FB and TB with a cadre of Eagles. And if you mixed Eagle-Ls and Eagle-Xs you could also drop the Leopard. I personally use EX/Leo with great success.

The Eagle-X specifically is a very versatile disc. It's ratings say -1, 3 but when brand new it is more like -0.5, 3.5. As it wears in it tends to lose it's HSS but keeps its LSS. so it ends up being good for line shaping. and since it is near 0 HSS when new it FHs superbly. you could technically drop both the FB and TB by switching to Eagles. you would still need about three different Eagles to pull it off. 1 Eagle for FH (either a continual new max weight DX or a Max weight Champ), 1 Eagle for normal driving duties (your choice of weight and plastic) and one Eagle for turning/shaping (well beat in DX or an Eagle-L -> this could replace your Leopard).

I'd say stop buying more discs fora few months. you've got plenty of good putters too especially once the Pure arrives. You should do a shoot out between the putters and then decide on which to solidify your bag. Or one driver putter and one putting putter.

Flat shots need running on the center line of the tee and planting each step on the center line. Anhyzer needs running from rear right to front left with the plant step hitting the ground to the left of the line you're running on. Hyzer is the mirror of that.

The Magnets are exactly what I needed in a putter. Stiff, really straight, been making more 20-40ft putts and more confident inside 20ft. Don't know if there is overlap between the Firebird and Heavy Teebird.

Hitting 400ft with the P-PD on occasion, longest disc for me so far. Teebirds are easy-mode 300ft shots, and can be pushed to 325ft. RR is used for big tailwinds, huge turnovers, and rollers. Rattler for special situations and pre-round catch.

Lost a Z Wasp, will replace with another, perhaps with a Hornet or a Ti Wasp. TBD.

Bag is a Lat64 pro bag with Lat straps. Picked it up last fall and used it all winter. Played a few rounds in warmer weather and the straps are less comfy than they are with a jacket/sweatshirt on. Might sell and buy something else if the comfort doesn't improve.

Things I have been messing with:GL Northman 170g - flippiest disc I own, more than the RR, was messing around with it yesterday. Might get a slot for weird standstill hyzer flip madness. Certainly fun to throw because of how flippy it is.Star Sidewinder 162g - payout selection at the tournament this weekend didn't have anything I actually need. Picked this disc up because it is a beauty. Marbled with multiple colors. Threw a few times yesterday, nice flights but overlaps with other stuff in the bag.X Avenger 169g - similar to the P-PD but the PD is stiffer and more consistent for me.

It is sad that they make so understable Northmen. You have enough power to throw warp speeders so maybe you should get one. Even if the course is short and tight it could come in handy with stand stills and throwing over obstacles. Since you have Buzzes maybe a Glo Z could take the overstable slot. It is not far from the Wasp.

Flat shots need running on the center line of the tee and planting each step on the center line. Anhyzer needs running from rear right to front left with the plant step hitting the ground to the left of the line you're running on. Hyzer is the mirror of that.

Testing: Cached in some payout bucks for random stuff I thought looked cool: D4 and a Trespass. Looking for: Something with less stability and more glide than a Zone, but less glide and more stability than a Challenger.